Leopold Aschenbrenner’s investment fund grew from $255 million to $5.5 billion in one year by pivoting from AI chip manufacturers to critical energy and physical infrastructure. Aschenbrenner exited major positions in NVIDIA and Broadcom, reallocating capital into companies like Bloom Energy, which provides on-site power generation via fuel cells to bypass grid constraints. He also heavily invested in CoreWeave for cloud infrastructure and acquired Bitcoin mining companies specifically to leverage their existing energy permits and real estate for AI data centers. This strategy reflects a broader thesis that AI development is increasingly constrained by physical resources rather than software alone. Additionally, Aschenbrenner maintains a significant short position against IT outsourcing firms like Infosys, betting that AI models will soon automate complex IT processes, effectively rendering traditional labor-based business models obsolete.
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